Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
tilleries 1
tilling 1
tilt 1
time 76
times 7
timetable 1
timidity 1
Frequency    [«  »]
81 water
78 made
76 engines
76 time
75 any
73 years
68 only
Thomas H. Marshall
James Watt

IntraText - Concordances

time

   Art.
1 1| journalism for the first time came into its own.~When 2 1| the understanding of his time, that it had to be unearthed 3 1| of centuries. At the same time a great part, probably the 4 1| destined to grow closer as time went on, and bore precious 5 2| after, she kept him for a time under her own care at home 6 2| opinion. As it was, by the time he was let out of the family 7 2| allow him to trifle away his time at home." " Look how my 8 2| ashamed of spending your time in this way! "Now this tale 9 2| botany and astronomy. At one time anatomy fascinated him, 10 2| schooling Watt worked for a time about his father's shop. 11 2| must have been the first time in its history that any 12 3| to earn his living. The time was long past when any town 13 3| wanted to learn. During that time he was to give his labour 14 3| difficult to avoid wasting time. Each workman in the shop 15 3| to be busy or away for a time, he got interrupted in his 16 3| a wider field. All this time he hardly ever went out. 17 3| Fortunately he escaped.~All this time Watt was working much too 18 3| the New World. From the time that the first Glasgow ship 19 3| annihilated, but by that time the prosperity of the city 20 3| coincidences that crop up from time to time in the pages of 21 3| that crop up from time to time in the pages of history. 22 3| found himself for the first time in the society of men who 23 3| friends he made at this time the two who most deeply 24 3| follower." Watt had by this time a wide reputation. The young 25 3| imperfect consonances." By the time the work was completed Watt 26 4| which are the births of Time."BACON.~ ~MAN has always 27 4| place among the births of Time. The first steps towards 28 4| the ages to a point where time has measurable length, and 29 4| pension. It was at this time that he wrote his amazing 30 4| common pump. But at the same time he applied Savery's improvement 31 4| two or three strokes at a time, and then expired. Here 32 4| satisfied him.~All that time he was toiling away at the 33 5| Watt's researches. This time he was hopelessly out of 34 5| that formed in it. By this time he was getting irritable 35 5| the wits of men at this time, that it seems not at all 36 5| criticism. Watt was by this time satisfied with the performances 37 5| invention, and much valuable time was wasted in trying alternatives 38 5| home, God willing, for some time," he wrote to his friend 39 5| crisis of his life, the time when he came nearest to 40 5| remain under to you." But time passed and the indefatigable 41 5| inventing. "~During all this time, and during the years that 42 5| steam engine. About the same time he invented an ingenious 43 5| was put on one side at the time, but Telford came across 44 5| that he explored at this time, served to distract his 45 6| married too soon. At the same time he was absolutely loyal 46 6| he wanted to. At the same time he showed a subtle appreciation 47 6| wrote to Watt, " I have only time to say that Mr. Boulton 48 6| colleague which increased with time, and throughout the period 49 6| engines, and at the same time he had had inquiries from 50 6| manufacture, and at the same time secure a public confirmation 51 7| widower, married a second time." It sounds a calculating 52 7| business there for a long time, and there were families 53 7| himself, and he had a hectic time flying backwards and forwards 54 7| The purchaser may at any time become unable or unwilling 55 7| profits had for the first time become a reality. Twenty 56 8| fastidious taste. It was time to pass on to other problems. 57 8| well known that for a long time cotton had been spun into 58 8| have taken up all my time and attention for months, 59 8| magnificent. It was the first time Watt had been treated as 60 8| conference with him.~Even in this time of apparent triumph Watt' 61 8| shoulders. Expansion was at this time very rapid, and the burden 62 8| well, Watt for the first time was free from debt and had 63 8| beginning to look forward to the time when they would be able 64 8| bodily presence was weak."~In time, however, as the machines 65 9| traces of the ravages of time. In the early fifties he 66 9| forgive him, for at that time he was piston-mad and engine-haunted.~ 67 9| away and left him. Some time later he returned. The attitude 68 9| once a month, choosing the time when the moon, being at 69 9| rebel against the decrees of time. He accepted old age, and 70 9| character, which increased with time. He believed, and probably 71 9| and that it will cost much time to bring it to any tolerable 72 9| imprudent. I even grudge the time I have taken to write these 73 9| regard them as pure waste of time, and have practically no 74 9| Soho works, and from that time onwards shipbuilders figured 75 9| be insurmountable. By the time work at Soho was running 76 9| coal England had at that time an undoubted preeminence.


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License